Two wrongs for the right

Conservatives of various kinds do not like either marijuana or socialism, but they face the conundrum that if legalization is coming, the social model of government ownership is the safest model. Two wrongs make a right?

John D. Rockefeller, Jr., quoted in the HuffPo piece below, was a conservative economically and socially. And a teetotaler. But he studied alcohol Prohibition hard, and came to understand that state alcohol stores were the safest outlet. Today’s “conservative” opponents of cannabis legalization are unwilling to see the writing on the wall — that legalization is coming. They’re dead-enders, gambling everything on pushing back the tide. They Just Say No. So they’ll get TV ads and flashing neon, and powerful private interests relentlessly pushing legislatures for “Liberalization” — like Big Tobacco and Big Alcohol.

It’s too late for state stores in some states. But not all. And other countries have a free hand. Meanwhile, some folks would legalize all drugs. With for-profit stores selling heroin and methamphetamine?

Socialism can mean government ownership of all businesses. Now Senator Sanders wouldn’t go nearly that far. But there’s a baby step of government ownership: State [cannabis] stores. State stores distribute alcohol responsibly today in many states. In Senator Sanders’s Vermont, privately-owned retail locations “sell spirits for the State.”

Unleashing the power of the free market to innovate and to please in most consumer businesses — that’s hard to argue with. But when it comes to intoxicants, “the private profit motive . . . makes inevitable the stimulation of sales.” That warning, about liquor, comes from the classic 1933 Rockefeller report, Toward Liquor Control. John D. Rockefeller, Jr., was the opposite of a socialist, but he put it this way: “Only as the profit motive is eliminated is there any hope of controlling the liquor traffic in the interest of a decent society.”

Even if marijuana is safer than alcohol, it’s not harmless for everyone. There’s a lot to say for a cautious roll-out of legalization. If you worry about advertisingand marketing and youth use, state stores are safer than private-profit-driven stores. Marijuana millionaires, ultra-successful in peddling product, are going to make parents nervous. The Right accuses the Left of over-regulating, but only a few ideologues would treat marijuana like milk.

Skeptics say state stores are “impossible” because marijuana is illegal under federal law. Here’s something to think about: Bernie Sanders becomes president. On January 20, 2017, marijuana is still illegal, and enforcement of federal marijuana laws is up to the Sanders Administration. His Justice Department might not go after marijuana sellers at all. But if it did, it might, like the Obama Justice Department, use prosecutorial discretion. It could target problem cases – like aggressive marijuana advertisers, appealing to young people. Or like companies selling cannabis containing pesticides and mold. Or like Big Marijuana that emulates Big Tobacco. Responsible state stores might emerge unscathed.

Sure, state stores involve trade-offs. State stores are less responsive to consumers than private sellers. If state stores don’t give consumers what they want, the black market will step up. And state sales of intoxicants give government a vested interest in selling more.

But state stores have an advantage over taxed stores in price flexibility. Tax rates are hard to change in the current political environment. The legal market will start out fighting a price war with the incumbent black market. And an eventual price collapse could prove unfortunate for public health. But a state store can change prices as nimbly as a corner gasoline station.

State stores offer another level of flexibility. What if a state changes its mind? A state that chose state sales can readily shift to private sales, as Washington state’s voters did recently with liquor. But private sellers, once up and running, will not be easily pushed aside if the public wants a do-over.

Then there’s the money. A state that legalizes marijuana creates wealth. State stores would make money from marijuana sales available for public use.

Whoever becomes President, there may be no safe path for states. Any state legalization plan could run the risk of violating federal law — by issuing marijuana business licenses or collecting taxes, for instance. Even if a state chooses private stores over state sales, prosecutions of state licensing officials and tax collectors might be possible, in theory. But the federal government is more likely to issue Cease and Desist orders, with the federal government saying “Stop!” and the state saying “OK.” And with no state officials getting handcuffed.

No one knows what the future holds, but state marijuana businesses are springing up. The Louisiana Legislature has turned all marijuana growing over to state land-grant universities — flagship LSU and HBCU Southern University. And the City of North Bonneville, Washington, is already selling recreational marijuana at retail. Bernie Sanders may not become President, but if he does, count on him not to start off by shutting those early government experiments down.